The perfect tune

AUSSIE STINGERS WILL BE THE SHARPEST IN THE WORLD. WHEELS EMBEDS WITH KIA’S CHASSIS TEAM TO TUNE IT FOR OUR ROADS

WORDS NATHAN PONCHARD PHOTOS NATHAN DUFF

USSIE chassis tuning of Kia’s rear-drive Stinger begins not in the flowing climbs of the Great Dividing Range, but deep inside Kia’s vast testing facility in Namyang, a two-hour bus haul from South Korea’s capital, Seoul.

It’s the self-contained functionality of a proving ground that makes them so desirable.

Here, you bolt in a new set of components, drive out the door and, a few minutes later, you’re flat out on the ride and handling circuit, unemcumbered by traffic and free of speed limits. And you have unlimited access to a headscrambling number of competitor vehicles.

And not just for the Stinger, either. The Koreans have comprehensive data on every European benchmark you care to name, having analysed the competition in painstaking detail. Not the current rear-drive Commodore, however.

“We haven’t looked at Commodore”, admits Gambold.

“Not because we don’t feel that Commodore is important, but it means nothing to these guys [at Namyang]. If we find an issue, it’s much better to compare it against something that they know. And European stuff is usually the benchmark; in this case the C-Class or 4 Series.”

The Aussies are restricted to a small number of tuneable components. In the case of Stinger, it’s four front springs and four rear springs for both the fourcylinder and V6, three front anti-roll bars and three rear anti-roll bars each, as well as a range of damping rates and steering tunes. Gambold simply has to make it work.

Six months before on-sale, Stinger is already too far down its development path for the Koreans to approve any tuning part outside the off-the-shelf stuff available in Namyang’s workshops. Says Gambold: “We don’t play with kinematic geometry – arm lengths, roll-steer coefficients, bump steers – because we trust and work with the data that the car is presented with. That stuff is vehicle design, not vehicle tuning. If there’s a big problem, then we’ll identify it and negotiate it, and there have been a couple of times where we’ve been successful in orchestrating change on kinematic design.

But, generally speaking, we work with what we’re given. [The Koreans] do enough benchmarking of other vehicles to know what they’re doing”.

Job One is forming a base tune to take back to Australia. In Korea, it’s chiefly springs, anti-roll bars and some damper tuning. Back home, it’ll be dampers and steering, including parameters of the ECS (Electronically Controlled Suspension) adaptive damping system and three levels of steering weight. “We’ll just build maximum/minimum stuff here, and then hopefully by the end of the week, get it into a window where we’re happy that’s our start point back in Australia,” says Gambold.

What he’s certain of, however, is that the domestic (Korean) suspension tune of the V6 won’t work for Australian roads. “Before I’ve driven it, I can tell you now I won’t particularly like it. Firstly, it’s going to pitch because the front is too soft. Its roll-couple distribution [the relative roll stiffness between front and rear] for a rear-wheel car is too neutral, so it’s going to lift the inside rear wheel a fair bit so it’ll probably have poor traction,” Gambold says.

“Even though they’re happy with it in their country and it suits their driving styles, I know that for Australia it won’t work. We have a lot of focus on pitching because we drive down country roads at 100 kays and if you’ve got a car that’s porpoising, you’ll notice it. Here [in Korea], you won’t. They like it because it gives them a bit of a luxo feel, an undamped feel, a bit of pitch, but we don’t like that.”

Indeed, the domestic-market V6 chassis set-up feels a bit wrong. Its back end, in particular, feels like it’s on a

A TOWN LIKE NAMYANG

There’s such a vast expanse inside Hyundai-Kia’s Namyang proving ground that it even has its own bus service. With 20,000 people working here every day, it’s like mobilising and feeding the population of an Aussie country town.

There’s loads of stuff I can’t talk about lapping the place, some undisguised except for front and rear car bras.

But it’s the lunchtime rush that’s equally fascinating.

Massive cafeterias are everywhere, each specialising in different cuisine. At exactly midday, a bell chimes loudly and workers pour from each building. Within minutes the cafeteria lines are almost out the door. An hour later, the food halls resemble ghost towns.

EXTRA STING

It’s no secret that Albert Biermann, Hyundai-Kia’s highperformance development chief, thinks there’s some headroom in the Stinger. “In Detroit he was very keen to say that there is more in this car… he has a vision for where he wants it to go,” says Kia’s Aussie PR boss, Kevin Hepworth. Gambold agrees: “It’s a car that Biermann spoke about. He wants to build to [M3, C63, et al] level, and I would too, but the parts bin isn’t there at the moment.” And what does Gambold think would make the ideal hot Stinger? “My personal view is that they would be best to just hot the V6 up.”

different page to the front, while the rear wheels lack purchase and produce too much wheelspin when you push the car hard on challenging surfaces.

In comparison, the initial Aussie tune feels far more cohesive, if still a bit understeery – especially when backto- backed with benchmarking vehicles, which include a BMW 428i xDrive Gran Coupe and an Audi A5 1.8TFSI Sportback, as well as a BMW M4 and Mercedes-AMG C63 S sedan to experience the other extreme. We deem the 428i the most relevant for comparison, with its softer rear end, pointier steering, and overall dynamic superiority to the (old-gen) A5.

Attention then turns to the Stinger four, and Gambold thinks the domestic tune isn’t bad. “Their final tune is the same hard parts as we want… and when we drove it we were really happy with it.” But pushed hard in the lane-change, the Stinger four understeers strongly, unlike the much sharper 428i. Limited by spring choice, Gambold opts for a smaller front anti-roll bar and has asked the on-site engineers from damper supplier Mando to rebuild the 2.0T’s rear dampers with reduced rebound and increased compression to lessen the understeer by “holding the rear end up”. Instead of inertly following the front, Gambold wants the Stinger’s rear end to play a contributing role in pointing the nose into a corner.

GAMBOLD WANTS THE STINGER’S REAR END TO PLAY A CONTRIBUTING ROLE IN POINTING THE NOSE INTO A CORNER

Two days of fettling later, Gambold is much happier with the V6. “We’ve increased the rear shock absorber rate quite a bit, so when you turn now it rolls in and you feel the back settle; you know that you’ve got that grip. It doesn’t understeer as much as it did, either.”

Back in Sydney, the tuning team’s deadline is just as tight. When I head out to Kia’s head office workshop, they’re determining the control strategy for the ECS dampers. “We’re looking at steering angle, brake pressure, acceleration position, lateral G-force, vehicle speed, the mode switch the driver has selected, body G-force, and wheel G-force,” says Gambold. “And from those inputs, the solenoid valve gets a logic from the map that we build. We’ll extrapolate the European high-speed data, and we can play with a lot of things – roll, pitch, bounce, slow roll, fast roll, hard braking, give it squat to help traction...”

I leave the white GT V6 in the pits and head out in the red 2.0T with fixed dampers. It doesn’t have its Aussie steering calibration, meaning it’s a little numb and overlight at the helm, but its chassis feels very keen on the sinuous, challenging roads snaking through Sydney’s Kuringai National Park. For comparative purposes, we bring along a BMW 420i Coupe. The automatic Beemer proves pleasant but colourless – just like the Stinger 2.0T’s engine.

Back at Kia HQ, I deliver my feedback on the four’s very sharp turn-in. “I don’t typically like that feel”, says Gambold. “I don’t like a fast rear yaw response, so if it’s doing that then we’ll probably tame it a bit. But then you can tame a lot of that with the power steering tune.”

And so the fine-tuning goes right to the wire. At the pointy end, it’s all about finessing. “Hours and hours of driving up and down on the same piece of road, changing numbers,” says Gambold. It’s much more mentally challenging than it sounds. But thanks to the engineers’ unwavering patience, persistence, and passion, our Stinger gets to be the best in the world.